4.8 Article

Beiging of perivascular adipose tissue regulates its inflammation and vascular remodeling

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-32658-6

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science KAKENHI [18J13507, 20K22893, 22K16097, 18K08096, 21H02908]
  2. Japan Heart Foundation Research Grant
  3. Japanese Circulation Society Clinical Research Grant
  4. Japan Foundation for Applied Enzymology
  5. SENSHIN Medical Research Foundation
  6. Japan Arteriosclerosis Prevention Fund
  7. Japan Cardiovascular Research Foundation
  8. Takeda Science Foundation
  9. Mochida Memorial Foundation for Medical and Pharmaceutical Research
  10. Bristol Myers Squibb K.K.
  11. Tokyo Biochemical Research Foundation
  12. JST FOREST Program [21466223]
  13. UTEC-UTokyo FSI Research Grant Program
  14. AMED [JP20ek0210152, JP18gm6210010, JP20ek0210141, JP20ek0109440, JP20ek0109487, JP17gm0810013, JP18km0405209, JP19ek0210118, JP19ek0109406, JP21ek0109543, JP21ek0109569, JP21tm0724601, JP22ama121016, JP22ek0210172, JP22ek0210167, JP22bm1123011]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Inflammation plays a key role in atherosclerosis development. Perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT) undergoes beiging in response to vascular injury, which regulates inflammation and vascular remodeling. Beige adipocytes in PVAT secrete Nrg4, which promotes alternative activation of macrophages and reduces vascular inflammation. The beiging of PVAT is observed in patients with acute aortic dissection.
Although inflammation plays critical roles in the development of atherosclerosis, its regulatory mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT) has been reported to undergo inflammatory changes in response to vascular injury. Here, we show that vascular injury induces the beiging (brown adipose tissue-like phenotype change) of PVAT, which fine-tunes inflammatory response and thus vascular remodeling as a protective mechanism. In a mouse model of endovascular injury, macrophages accumulate in PVAT, causing beiging phenotype change. Inhibition of PVAT beiging by genetically silencing PRDM16, a key regulator to beiging, exacerbates inflammation and vascular remodeling following injury. Conversely, activation of PVAT beiging attenuates inflammation and pathological vascular remodeling. Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals that beige adipocytes abundantly express neuregulin 4 (Nrg4) which critically regulate alternative macrophage activation. Importantly, significant beiging is observed in the diseased aortic PVAT in patients with acute aortic dissection. Taken together, vascular injury induces the beiging of adjacent PVAT with macrophage accumulation, where NRG4 secreted from the beige PVAT facilitates alternative activation of macrophages, leading to the resolution of vascular inflammation. Our study demonstrates the pivotal roles of PVAT in vascular inflammation and remodeling and will open a new avenue for treating atherosclerosis.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available